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CORRESPONDENCE.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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tile and adverse to granting the Raman Catholic Claims . It was , however , bufc justice to say , that the individuals whom these petitions represented , asked nothing for themselves which they wished to be denied . to other people ; and he must say that he felt great satisfaction in being the interpreter of these opinions to their Lordships . Lord Ellenborough had heard with
great satisfaction the last observation which had falten from the Noble Lord , —that the petitioners were desirous that the same liberty for which they prayed jnight be extended to others . He wished that that feeling was universal . Of this he was convinced , that unless the Catholics and . Dissenters cordially unijfced , they never would succeed in gaining their obfect .
The Bishop of Chester wished to reply to an observation which had been made during the discussion of to-night . It was far from his intention to enter at large into the subject , which was one of too great magnitude and importance to be discussed incidentally . He would , however , take the liberty of saying , that the Noble Baron who spoke last but one , had certainly unintentionally
misrepresented the nature of the Test and Corporation Acts . The persons who , to use a strong term , claimed those Acts , did not intend to stigmatise any person , but to secure themselves , and not with a view of placing any class under any stigma or disqualification . What was the case , divested of all adventitious colouring ? If the Legislature considered a certain form of faith and
discipline worthy to be taken into alliance with the State , it became the duty of the Legislature to prevent the demolition of that Church , by the intrusion into places of power and trust of persons who , from the circumstance of their being sincere in their opinions , must of necessity wish to undermine the established order of things . Whether such was the wish of the
Dissenters at large , he would not presume to give an opinion ; and he moat cordially gave his consent to the proposition advanced by a Noble Earl , whom he was happy to call his friend , that in no Case ought any religious disqualifications to be imposed , unless they were necessary to secure the constitution as established . Whether the Test and
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' ' ' " '' . " ' i r The length of the preceding interesting reports leaves the Conductors np room for the notice of Correspondents , which they must postpone to the next Number .
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Corporation Acts went beyond that point , and whether some other provision might not be discovered , was a question to which he would not at present reply ; but he repeated that the Dissenters were excluded because the State took it for granted that the Church as established was the true
Church , and its discipline the proper one , and did not put in power those persons who must be well disposed to overturn the Established Church . Lord Holland then presented the petitions . The first came from the Ministers of the Three Denominations of Dissenters in and about the - metropolis ; the next was from the Wesleyan Dissenters of Manchester ; and the last came from the Dissenters of the town and borough of Wareham .
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The Twenty-first Annual General Meeting of the Unitarian Tract Society , established in Birmingham , for Warwickshire and the ? neighbouring counties , will be held at Alcester , on Wednesday , July 11 , 1827 / The Rev . J . R . Wreford will preach on the occasion . A dinner will be provided , at a moderate charge , for such of the subscribers and friends as may attend the Meeting .
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The Annual Meeting of the Kent and Sussex Unitarian Association will be held at Canterbury , on Wednesday the 4 th of July , when the Rev . Robert Aspland is expected to preach . . A religious service , on occasion of the settlement of the Rev . B . Mardon , as Unitarian Minister at Maidstone , will be held there on the 6 th July , when the Rev . L . H olden , of Tenterden , and the Rev . Robert Aspland , of ^ Hackney , are expected to be engaged .
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The Devon and Cornwall Unitanan Association , and the Devon and Cornwall Unitarian Missionary Society , will hold their Annual Meeting conjointly , at Honiton , on Wednesday , the 11 th July next , when the Rev . T . W . Horsfield is expected to preach .
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gfif 2 - - Cwrsepondence .
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CORRESPONDENCE .
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Mr . J . Ketley , Student of Manchester College York , has accepted an invitation to become the Minister of th $ Bowl-Alley Lane Congregation , Hull .
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NOTICES .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1827, page 552, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1798/page/80/
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